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Hope of Heaven Dashed to Hell
E.A. Johnston
0:00
0:00 14:43
E.A. Johnston

Hope of Heaven Dashed to Hell

E.A. Johnston · 14:43

E.A. Johnston warns that a gospel without repentance offers a false hope of heaven that ultimately leads to hell, urging believers to preach the full message of salvation through repentance and faith in Jesus Christ.
In this powerful evangelistic sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges the common gospel message that emphasizes belief without repentance. He stresses the biblical necessity of repentance as the foundation for true salvation and warns of the eternal consequences of a watered-down gospel. Johnston calls preachers and believers alike to faithfully proclaim the full counsel of God, urging sinners to recognize their lost condition and turn to Christ with genuine repentance and faith.

Full Transcript

I can't read the last chapter of the Gospel of John without thinking of a certain pastor. In the last chapter of John is the seaside scene of Jesus and his disciples and the miraculous catch of fish and then the reinstatement of Peter. This pastor loved to tell the story of how he led his Jewish doctor to Jesus.

For years this well-known pastor had a Jewish physician and he often told him about Jesus, but the man was never interested. Finally, it was this Jewish physician's time to die and he laid down in the hospital. And this pastor said he often visited this man's hospital room because he had a burden for this doctor to come to Christ.

He'd leave his bedside, sharing John 3.16 with him, and then he would ask him to believe in Jesus, but the man never would, until on the last visit to the dying doctor. This pastor read him the story in John chapter 21 about the remarkable catch of fish, and then the pastor asked the dying man if he would now believe in Jesus and trust him as his personal savior. And the man asked, how many fish did you say were in the net? The pastor replied, 153.

And the man declared with a smile, 153. If there is a God in heaven who can know the number of fish in that net, then I believe. And this pastor left this man's hospital room in such an excited state of mind because he got this man to finally believe in Christ that, once he got outside, he threw his car keys high into the air with a shout, but the pastor said he should not have done that because it was nighttime and he lost his keys in that hospital parking lot, and it took him 20 minutes to find them in the dark.

Now I tell you that story, friends, because it represents the gospel message that has been predominantly given in the pulpits of this country for the last 80 years, and that message is this, for God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, and whosoever believes on him shall not perish, but have everlasting life. God loves you, friend. He sent his only son to die on a cross for you so you can be saved and go to heaven to be with him.

And if you only believe in Jesus, friend, and accept him right now into your heart as your personal savior, then you can be saved and you can know for sure that when you die, you will go to heaven. Now that's basically the gospel of the last 80 years and the gospel of this hour, friends, in a nutshell, and that only-believed gospel message will be swallowed by many who want a hope of heaven when they die, and they'll take your little Jesus and that free ticket to heaven so long as they don't have to have a God who will get in the way of their daily living. But the sad reality of that kind of watered-down gospel is that it gives unsaved individuals a church membership and a hope of heaven that will one day be dashed to hell.

That pastor who threw his keys up in the air and lost them would have served his Jewish doctor friend better if he had treated him like those corkeys and first got him lost. Jesus said, For the Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which was lost. And that's the trouble of the easy-to-believe gospel, friends, because it offers a person a Savior from sin without first showing him why he needs one in the first place.

Jesus told the self-righteous Pharisees, who had both feet already in hell, They that are whole have no need of the physician, but they that are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to believe on me. Is that what he said? That's what we think he said.

That's what we tell folks. But no, friends, Jesus really said, I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. Sinners to repentance.

A man or woman hardened in their sins who swallows an easy-to-believe gospel and makes a decision to accept Jesus will find out too late that their hope of heaven was dashed to hell when they die in their sins and open their eyes in hell. And that's the title of my message, friends, A Hope of Heaven Dashed to Hell. Because if we fail in our gospel witness to inform men of their duty of repentance, then we go against the very gospel of Jesus Christ, whose very first public sermon was on repentance, and his last word to the church and revelation was to repent.

His marching orders to his followers in the Great Commission was to preach repentance. We see this in Luke's gospel in chapter 24, which states, Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the scriptures, and said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behooved Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day, and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. Jesus preached repentance, and he warned, Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.

And the message of the early church was repentance, as it's summed up by the apostle Paul in Acts chapter 20 and verses 20 and 21, which state, And how I kept back nothing that was propellant to you, but have showed you and have taught you publicly, and from house to house testified both to the Jews and also to the Greeks, repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ. The early church, along with the apostle Paul, preached the full counsel of God by warning men everywhere to repent. But we in this country, friends, for the last 80 years or so, have not been faithful to the great commission, but have been guilty of the great omission by failing to warn men and women and boys and girls of their gospel duty to repent and believe.

Oh, Rolf Barnard, the greatly used Baptist evangelist, who went up and down this country for nearly 40 years, never failed to warn sinners that their only way of escape from a burning hell was to exercise repentance toward God and faith in his Son, Jesus Christ. Rolf Barnard would preach the law before grace and get men lost so they could be saved, and he saw revivals that would shake an entire town. It was estimated he brought over 100,000 souls to Christ under his searching sermons that shut men up to God so God could save them.

He would often tell a sinner that, if he wanted a hope of heaven, then he must be willing to throw down his shotgun of rebellion at the nail-pierced feet of a sovereign Christ and repent or go to hell. One day, after preaching a hard message on repentance, Rolf Barnard was approached by an old pink-faced deacon who admonished him by saying, Son, if you want some advice, it's easier to catch flies with honey than with vinegar. And Rolf Barnard replied, I reckon that's so, if I was catching flies.

But I'm not out to catch flies but to kill men and show them they are lost and in need of a substitute for sin. It greased my heart, friends, when I come across sincere churchfolk who have spent their life energies serving in their church and serving God the best way they know how and who are victims of an easy-to-believe gospel message that can't save a fly, much less a sinner hoarding in their sins. They know nothing about an experiential knowledge of Christ and they get a glassy look in their eyes when you try to talk to them about deep spiritual things.

Their entire testimony hangs on the fact that, oh, one time in their past they walked an aisle in response to the preacher's invitation and they made a decision to believe in Jesus and take him as their personal savior and they were told they were now a Christian. They joined the church and were baptized and were put to work in some capacity there these many years and they've been faithful in their church attendance and even dutifully shared their faith through the years by telling others about the love of Jesus while they hang on to their hope of heaven with their one hand and the world with the other. If you try to witness to them, they will inform you that they have already done that.

But they've never been told that church membership is not salvation. They've never been showed their need of a savior from sin. They've never been saved because they've never been lost because they've never been awakened to their lost condition and they've never come under Holy Spirit conviction for sin and they've never exercised true gospel repentance and they've missed Christ because they never have been changed by supernatural act of the Holy Spirit and regeneration through the new birth.

Although they have their name on a church roll and have for years believed themselves to be saved, they have never been washed in the blood and born from above and their hope of heaven will one day be dashed to hell when they close their eyes in death to this world and open them in another region which they are totally unprepared for and one from which they will never escape for all eternity. And the men who fed them that easy belief message will come to a settling day themselves for all evangelists and pastors who failed to preach up a crucified Christ on a bloodstained cross and warned sinners to flee from the wrath to come and to repent of their sins and come to Christ like a empty-handed beggar would come seeking mercy will one day stand at the judgment with blood on their hands because in Ezekiel 33.8 God declares, When I say unto the wicked, O wicked man, thou shalt surely die if thou does not speak to warn the wicked from his way that wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand. I wonder, friends, how many preachers will stand there on that day with bloody hands.

Brother preacher, do you fail to warn men? Do you sugarcoat the gospel to get decisions? Then take a look at your hands. Look at your bloody hands. A verse in my Bible which I feel best represents all those church members who now lie in graveyards scattered all across this land who died under the only-believed gospel and whose pastor stood over their casket and said to the bereaved family, Old Joe is now gone from us, but he's now in a better place up with Jesus.

And this verse also applies to all church members today who are yet still on earth and whose heart still beats within but who have never been truly born again but holding their hand a free ticket to heaven because someone told them they were saved. That descriptive verse, Francis, found in the book of Proverbs it's Proverbs 30, 12, which declares, There is a generation that is pure in their own eyes and yet is not washed from their filthiness. Listen, friends, your sins must get under the blood.

I know I'm a sinner and I need a substitute for sin in the person of Jesus Christ. And so do you, friend. So do you.

Let our pulpits ring with a message of authority warning sinners of their great duty of repentance and that we must get men lost before they can be saved. They have to feel the need of a savior from sin before the remedy can be applied. Again, Jesus said, They that are whole have no need of the physician but they that are sick I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.

Let us, who are all gospel witnesses, wash our hands and do the same. Let us pray.

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Easy-Believe Gospel and Its Danger
    • The common gospel message of belief without repentance
    • The false hope it offers to sinners
    • The risk of a hope of heaven dashed to hell
  2. II. The Necessity of Repentance
    • Jesus’ call to sinners to repent, not just believe
    • The early church’s emphasis on repentance and faith
    • Repentance as a prerequisite to true salvation
  3. III. The Consequences of Neglecting Repentance
    • Church members who are not truly born again
    • The danger of church membership without salvation
    • The accountability of preachers who omit repentance
  4. IV. A Call to Faithful Gospel Preaching
    • Preach repentance with authority
    • Warn sinners of their lost condition
    • Encourage true conversion through the new birth

Key Quotes

“A man or woman hardened in their sins who swallows an easy-to-believe gospel and makes a decision to accept Jesus will find out too late that their hope of heaven was dashed to hell.” — E.A. Johnston
“Jesus said, 'I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.' Sinners to repentance.” — E.A. Johnston
“If we fail in our gospel witness to inform men of their duty of repentance, then we go against the very gospel of Jesus Christ.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Examine your own heart to ensure you have truly repented and been born again, not just believed superficially.
  • Preach and share the gospel with a clear call to repentance, warning others of the consequences of sin.
  • Avoid offering a watered-down gospel that neglects the necessity of repentance and the seriousness of sin.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main warning of this sermon?
The sermon warns that preaching a gospel without repentance leads people to a false hope of heaven that will ultimately result in eternal separation from God.
Why is repentance important according to the sermon?
Repentance is essential because it acknowledges a person’s lost condition and need for a Savior, which is necessary before true salvation can occur.
How does the sermon describe the ‘easy-believe gospel’?
It describes it as a watered-down message that offers salvation through belief alone without confronting sin or calling for repentance.
What biblical examples support the call to repentance?
Jesus’ ministry, the early church’s preaching in Acts, and warnings in Luke and Ezekiel all emphasize repentance as vital for salvation.
What practical advice does the speaker give to preachers?
Preachers are urged to faithfully warn sinners of their need to repent and not to sugarcoat the gospel to gain easy decisions.

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